This week in San Francisco, this article on Indybay has photos of Golden Gate Park’s own wild coyotes, and suggests supporting them via organizations like Project Coyote. (“Promoting coexistence between people and wildlife through education, science and advocacy.”)

In San Francisco, a city of 805,000, there are 108,000
children, according to the 2010 census. And there are 180,000 dogs, and
10 coyotes, according to city estimates. The coyote population has grown
nationwide, with an increasing number making forays into suburban and
urban areas.

Coyotes arrived relatively late here, with the first sightings in
2004. Around that time, a coyote was videotaped crossing the Golden Gate
Bridge into the city at night. Genetic tests later confirmed that the
city’s coyotes share ties to those found to the north, on the other side
of the bridge.

For those who haven’t had a close-up view of the Golden Gate Bridge (75 years old tomorrow), that’s an incredible migration for a wild animal using a highly trafficked route (and one of the best bike rides I’ve ever done!)

Mediating the porous boundaries between wildlife, people, and their pets often falls on municipal agencies like San Francisco’s Animal Care and Control. As a volunteer for them, I have to promote them as a super cool place and suggest that interested people get involved in your own city, especially in places lacking generous budgets.

Coyotes, hawks, and even a bear have gone through SFACC’s doors. It’s a public, open-door shelter that has to take any animal that comes in (unlike the SPCA, which selects for adoptability). It maintains a high success rate of around 80% housing (so I was told), while shelters in less advantaged places have numbers like 30%.

Part of the reason for success is its dedicated volunteers, who even help run a program of mercy for condemned animals on “death row” for being vicious, while court appeals may pend for a long time before they’re euthanized.

Shelter volunteering is awesome. It’s free, it’s good for your health, it’s rewarding for other people and animals, and it’s worth putting on your resume. All it takes is a short training course to be approved, then you can take dogs out for walking and socialize them to help find a forever home. It’s a good way to ease into adopting your own, too.